M Kaneko1, A Schimming, G J Gleich, H Kita. 1. Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Medical and Graduate Schools, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Eosinophils are selectively recruited into the tissues during chronic allergic inflammation. IgE is considered an initiator of the allergic reaction; however, the roles of IgE in allergic inflammation are not fully understood. OBJECTIVE: We tested the hypothesis that antigen interaction with specific IgE antibody provokes eosinophilic inflammation. METHODS: BALB/c mice were actively sensitized with ragweed extract and passively sensitized with anti-dinitrophenyl (anti-DNP) mouse IgE and challenged intraperitoneally by injecting either ragweed extract or DNP-ovalbumin (OVA). Immediate anaphylactic responses were examined by monitoring vascular permeability and by measuring histamine content in peritoneal lavage fluids. Late-phase allergic responses were examined by total cell counts and cell differentials. RESULTS: Mice sensitized and challenged with ragweed showed immediate anaphylactic responses followed by temporal increases in neutrophils at 3 to 12 hours and sustained increases in eosinophils in their peritoneal cavities after 24 hours. Double-sensitized mice (ie, sensitized actively for ragweed and passively for DNP-OVA) challenged with ragweed showed immediate anaphylactic responses and peritoneal eosinophilia at 48 hours. Double-sensitized mice challenged with DNP-OVA showed comparable immediate anaphylactic responses but no peritoneal eosinophilia. Furthermore, at 8 hours, ragweed-challenged animals recruited both eosinophils and neutrophils, but DNP-OVA-challenged animals recruited only neutrophils. Finally, after active sensitization and challenge with ragweed, mast cell-deficient mice (WBB6F1-W/W(v)) lacked the immediate response but showed comparable eosinophil accumulation as their litter mate controls (WBB6F1-+/+). CONCLUSION: Interaction of antigen with IgE antibody is insufficient to provoke eosinophilic inflammation in mice.
BACKGROUND: Eosinophils are selectively recruited into the tissues during chronic allergic inflammation. IgE is considered an initiator of the allergic reaction; however, the roles of IgE in allergic inflammation are not fully understood. OBJECTIVE: We tested the hypothesis that antigen interaction with specific IgE antibody provokes eosinophilic inflammation. METHODS: BALB/c mice were actively sensitized with ragweed extract and passively sensitized with anti-dinitrophenyl (anti-DNP) mouse IgE and challenged intraperitoneally by injecting either ragweed extract or DNP-ovalbumin (OVA). Immediate anaphylactic responses were examined by monitoring vascular permeability and by measuring histamine content in peritoneal lavage fluids. Late-phase allergic responses were examined by total cell counts and cell differentials. RESULTS:Mice sensitized and challenged with ragweed showed immediate anaphylactic responses followed by temporal increases in neutrophils at 3 to 12 hours and sustained increases in eosinophils in their peritoneal cavities after 24 hours. Double-sensitized mice (ie, sensitized actively for ragweed and passively for DNP-OVA) challenged with ragweed showed immediate anaphylactic responses and peritoneal eosinophilia at 48 hours. Double-sensitized mice challenged with DNP-OVA showed comparable immediate anaphylactic responses but no peritoneal eosinophilia. Furthermore, at 8 hours, ragweed-challenged animals recruited both eosinophils and neutrophils, but DNP-OVA-challenged animals recruited only neutrophils. Finally, after active sensitization and challenge with ragweed, mast cell-deficient mice (WBB6F1-W/W(v)) lacked the immediate response but showed comparable eosinophil accumulation as their litter mate controls (WBB6F1-+/+). CONCLUSION: Interaction of antigen with IgE antibody is insufficient to provoke eosinophilic inflammation in mice.